The price increases are being driven by shortages, and don’t just devices such as smartphones, but also SSDs and anything that contains flash storage.

So it seems like ahead of the launch of the new iPhones — and in advance of the quarter that will see Apple shift tens of millions of units — Apple has taken the decision to readjust prices to take this NAND price increase into consideration.

But not every iPhone saw a price rise — the price of the iPhone SE was cut by $50, which means that now Apple has iPhones for sale that range from +$999 to $349. And it’s important to note that $349 is the lowest entry price for an iPhone in the US to date.

Here is the current iPhone lineup that Apple offers:

iPhone X: $999

iPhone 8 Plus: $799

iPhone 8: $699

iPhone 7 Plus: $669

iPhone 7: $549

iPhone 6s Plus: $549

iPhone 6s: $449

iPhone SE: $349

Apple also increased pricing for the two highest iPad Pro storage configurations by $50.

If we see NAND prices fall next year, we could see Apple cut prices — something that it could do in during the more quiet quarters to give sales an uplift — and we might see the first sub-$300 iPhone being offered.